The May 3, 1958 show at the Boston Arena was the beginning of the end for Alan Freed, the disc jockey who called himself the ‘Father of Rock ‘n Roll.’ He was charged with inciting a riot and quit his job as a WINS disc jockey. A year later, his career would be over in a payola scandal.

Alan Freed

Alan Freed, born Dec. 13, 1921, in Windber, Pa., started out playing hot jazz and pop music on small radio stations in Pennsylvania and Ohio. By 1951 he played rhythm and blues on Cleveland’s WJW station under the name ‘Moondog.’ He staged the first rock concert in March 1952 at the Cleveland Arena. Twenty thousand fans crashed the gates (the Arena held 10,000) at a dance he called the Moondog Coronation Ball.

John B. Hynes

Freed moved to WINS in New York City in 1954. There, Life magazine acknowledged him as the creator of the rock ‘n roll craze. He was known internationally through rock ‘n roll movies and a half-hour radio show that aired in Europe. The Beatles were introduced to Little Richard and Elvis Presley on the show, called Jamboree.

Freed incited controversy. He hosted a television program on ABC in 1957 that didn't last long. On the fourth show, African-American singer Frankie Lymon danced with a white girl, which offended ABC’s southern affiliates.

By 1958 he emceed and managed the 17-act Big Beat show. It featured Jerry Lee Lewis, Frankie Lymon, Chuck Berry and Danny and the Juniors.

The Fateful Show

In Boston that Saturday night in May, 20 police were on hand for the 5,000 rock ‘n roll fans who jammed into the Arena.

Chuck Berry

The first half of the show went smoothly. But during the second half, police interrupted the show several times, forcing Freed to quiet the audience. Jerry Lee Lewis and his bands had the kids dancing in the aisles, but the police again forced Freed to stop the show and make the audience sit down.

Then Chuck Berry came on stage to close the show. Again, the kids danced in the aisles. Again, the police forced Freed to make them sit down. One of the police officers refused to dim the houselights. Freed, frustrated, told the audience, “It looks like the police in Boston don’t want you kids to have any fun.”

At that point, fighting broke out and kids started throwing chairs at each other. Freed got blamed for inciting the melee with his remarks, but the fight may have been a result of gang rivalry. Berry hid behind the drummer to get as far away from the scuffle as possible. The crowd then poured out into the streets.

Two Arrests

What happened next is unclear. The newspapers reported stabbings, sluggings, robberies and rapes. Jack Hooke, Berry’s manager, remembers walking out of the Arena a half hour after the show ended and seeing nobody.

The neighborhood surrounding the Arena was then a rough part of town with frequent muggings. A lawyer for Alan Freed said the police simply took everything from the police blotter in the precinct that night and blamed it on his client.

Only two people were arrested, and a news item about the riot described incidents far from the Arena – rock throwing at the Boston Garden and muggings in Roxbury and Back Bay.

On Thursday, Alan Freed announced he was quitting WINS because the station didn’t stand behind him. Prosecutors eventually dropped the charges due to lack of evidence. The Boston show, though, was a harbinger of more trouble. In 1959 WABC fired Alan Freed after he accepted payola from record companies. He spent the rest of his career working for small radio stations, and died at the age of 43 from uremia and cirrhosis brought on by alcoholism.

Freed was far more prescient about rock ‘n roll than Mayor Hynes. He once said,